Pubdate: Thu, 04 Oct 2007 Source: Winnipeg Free Press (CN MB) Copyright: 2007 Winnipeg Free Press Contact: http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/502 Author: Mia Rabson HARPER TO FOCUS ON PORT, DRUGS Churchill, Narcotics Strategy Big Themes In Manitoba Visit Manitoba will get lots of prime ministerial attention when Stephen Harper arrives today for a two-day visit that will include a national anti-drug strategy and an upgrade of the Port of Churchill. Harper will also attend a Tory party fundraising barbecue and participate in the annual general meeting of the Bilingual Municipalities Association of Manitoba today. This afternoon, Harper, Health Minister Tony Clement, Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day and Manitoba's senior minister, Treasury Board President Vic Toews, will use the backdrop of the Salvation Army in inner-city Winnipeg to launch a multi-tiered approach to deal with both the justice and health side of illicit drugs. The $64-million plan promised in this year's federal budget will include stiffer penalties for drug dealers and improved treatment options for drug addicts. The strategy is also expected to have an educational campaign warning young people about the dangers of drugs. In recent weeks, Clement has roundly condemned the former Liberal government 's plan to decriminalize marijuana. It was a policy the Tories trashed immediately upon winning government in 2006, and Clement has said repeatedly he feels the former government sent mixed messages to young people about the dangers of drug use. The plan will not address the long-term funding of Vancouver's safe-injection site, or whether such a program should be expanded. Clement has publicly been less than lukewarm about the idea of safe injection sites, where drug addicts shoot up with clean needles under the supervision of counsellors and health professionals. In August, Clement said research cast doubt on the Vancouver site's effectiveness, causing an outpouring of anger from research scientists and doctors who said the research shows the site is working. But Clement deftly moved the controversy over the safe injection site out of the way for his big anti-drug announcement by extending the funding for the Vancouver site by six months to the end of June. The funding was to have run out at the end of December but Clement said the extension was given to allow for further research. Before making the announcement, Harper will participate in a round-table meeting at the Salvation Army. He will fly up to Churchill tonight with Premier Gary Doer. Friday, he and Doer will make a joint funding announcement likely to expand or improve the Port of Churchill and the Hudson Bay Rail line, which is Churchill's only land link to the south. The port is mainly used by the Canadian Wheat Board to export grain, but there has been a lot of work ongoing to get additional shipping through the port, including making an Arctic route for goods coming in from Asia. But the infrastructure is quite old and the port itself needs upgrading to handle container ships. Harper will be just the third sitting prime minister to visit northern Manitoba in the last 40 years and the first to hit Churchill. Pierre Trudeau visited Thompson in 1967, and Paul Martin stopped in The Pas and Thompson in 2004. John Turner made a campaign stop in The Pas in 1984 in the midst of the federal election. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman